Another day, another Star Wars: Episode VII rumor. Following the news that Harrison Ford’s injury will sideline the actor for six months, is Oscar Isaac’s role being expanded? (Slashfilm)

Dustin breaks down the pros and cons of FX’s Tyrant premiere; I also found it intriguing, but there were several disturbing scenes that made me question whether I’ll be able to stick with the show. (Warming Glow)

Channing Tatum will play Gene Kelly, Ralph Fiennes, a director and The Swinton, a Hollywood gossip columnist in the Coen Brothers’ next feature, Hail Caesar!. That’s about all I need to know — take my money. (Film School Rejects)

Award winning actor Eli Wallach (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The Magnificent Seven, Batman) has died at the age of 98. (Dlisted)

Steven Tyler went to a Stella McCartney party dressed like pointy-booted Jesus, and I don’t know how, but I think he’s pulling it off. Still, the Fug Girls are always great with a headline. (Go Fug Yourself)

Stephen Merchant makes the case for how much better things would be if Great Britain had won the Revolutionary War. Never mind that it’s part of a Newcastle Brown Ale ad campaign; they’re all kind of brilliant. (Laughing Squid)

Some guy sat close to a woman on a bus and seemed a little too interested in her texting, so she and her gal pal gave hims something nice and creepy to read. (Uproxx)

Well, it looks like Lana Del Rey isn’t done saying stupid things. This time around she spoke about dying young like her heroes, Kurt Cobain and Amy Winehouse, and Frances Bean Cobain wasn’t having that shit. (via Vulture)

I could stare at Jerry Liu’s minimalist Game of Thrones illustrations all day long. Gorgeous. (via Nerd Approved)

Are these artists’ The Birds posters better than the original? I think so. (Unreality)

Aquilia took her first foray into Brandon Sanderson’s work with The Emperor’s Soul, a novella, and thankfully found that it wasn’t plagued by the almost inescapable fad of fragmented sentences. “Sanderson’s writing style was unnoticeable - that is to say, perfect. ” What have you read by Sanderson? (Cannonball Read 6)